Month: June 2014

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Councilmember Nick Licata Statement in Support of Minimum Wage Ordinance

City of Seattle
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 6/2/2014

Councilmember Nick Licata  

Councilmember Nick Licata Statement in Support of Minimum Wage Ordinance

Final Speech As Delivered

SEATTLE - Councilmember Nick Licata delivered the following speech today in support of the Council's adoption of a $15 per hour minimum wage:

Mario Savio once said, as he was being dragged away by the police for setting up a card table on a campus without a permit to provide civil rights pamphlets. "There's a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious-makes you so sick at heart-that you can't take part. And you've got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it that unless you're free, the machine will be prevented from working."

Savio said that 50 years ago, but it's true today as well. That's how the fast food workers acted exactly one year ago in Seattle when they walked off their jobs to be free from their exploitation. And that is a powerful word, filled with personal accusation. But it is not personal, it is a simple condition that has accompanied the growth of our market economy since the 1980's. The consolidation of capital into fewer and fewer hands, has dramatically transformed the dynamics of this democracy.

Our citizens, and I'm not talking about legal status here, I'm talking about the basic relationship of people to their government, have seen - not only their wealth diminish but their political power as well. And with the decline of their influence over their government they have seen their wages stagnate while corporate profits have piled up ever higher. In fact, the three largest employers of low-wage workers have all seen large profit increases in the last few years and are all more profitable than they were before the Great Recession.

The legislation we pass today is just one small step to strike a fair and sustainable path toward our city's and our nation's prosperity. To those who have said that the sky will fall, I assure them - the sun will continue to rise. Except when there is daylight, we will see fewer people living hand to mouth.

And there is' much more to be done! But I can think of no other city with better political and community leadership to passionately and pragmatically continue to close the income and wealth gap. And in doing so, Seattle will show what a true world class city is: A city where all the classes live in the same world - where they receive fair and livable compensation for an honest days' work.

We have much to be proud of. We should celebrate; we should all celebrate, because we have made the world a little better for all of us, owners and workers alike. Thanks to all who have worked so hard to get us to today's victory, a victory that will be heard around this nation.

We are here today thanks, first and foremost, to the fast food workers who walked off their jobs a year ago in Seattle and even before that across the nation. They risked their jobs to tum this nation around. To tum it from placing investor returns above the basic needs of our citizens.

However, to date, not one city has adopted $15 an hour - except Seattle. Others must follow. But it is not easy path to go down. As witnessed by how few are on it. It is also true, that the profits of the largest businesses have soared while worker wages have stagnated. In 1965, CEOs made 20.1 times the pay of the average worker. By 2012, that ratio was more than 10 times larger: CEOs made 273 times the pay of the average worker in 2012. As a result families are living on wages that are barely above the poverty level.

These are facts. And there are other facts - which we must face up to. We do not have magic wand. But we do have leaders. I have stood with the democratically elected leaders of over 10,000 organized Seattle laborers - in supporting the plan before us. I stood with them, because they struggled hard for every word in that agreement. They wanted much more. As did I; and as do many of you. I will continue to stand with them. I acknowledge their hard work. And I will work to duplicate their victory, in cities across the nation. And as such, I will not break ranks with them and I will continue to support what they have agreed to - in the plan as it is before us, neither water downed and nor altered.

[View in Council Newsroom]

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Councilmember Kshama Sawant Statement in Support of Minimum Wage Ordinance

City of Seattle
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 6/2/2014

Councilmember Kshama Sawant

Councilmember Kshama Sawant Statement in Support of Minimum Wage Ordinance

Final Speech As Delivered

SEATTLE - Councilmember Kshama Sawant delivered the following speech today in support of the Council's adoption of a $15 per hour minimum wage:

A half century ago, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. fought for a living wage at the March on Washington, where a quarter of a million people, mostly black workers, demanded their rights. They called for $2 per hour. In today's dollars, that is the same number we have just won - Dr. King and his movement had launched the first fight for 15, at the same time they fought against the brutal racism of Jim Crow.

With this vote, Seattle will become the first major city in the U.S. to win a $15 per hour minimum wage.

Our victory comes less than six months after the launch of 15 Now, after the election of the first socialist to the city council in 100 years. We built on the work of labor in SeaTac, on the growing movement of the fast food workers which began in New York one year before. We worked alongside organized labor in Seattle, which campaigned continuously for 15.

We forced the city establishment to lift the wages of 100,000 low wage workers in Seattle - to transfer $3 billion from business to workers at the bottom of the wage scale over the next 10 years.

We did this. Workers did this.

Today's first victory for 15 will inspire people all over the nation.

We need to recognize what happened here in Seattle that led us to this point.

15 was not won at the bargaining table as a so-called "sensible compromise" between labor and business. It was not the result of the generosity of corporations or their Democratic Party representatives in government.

What was voted on in the city council was a reflection of what workers and the labor movement won on the street over this last year.

In 15 Now, groups of workers and activists met weekly, held mass conferences and debates, organized rallies, and engaged thousands of people around the city about the need for a living wage. We won the public debate - in a recent poll 74% of voters now support 15. We defeated the arguments of business in the corporate media.

Let this be our guide. At every stage of the struggle, corporations and their representatives have sought to undermine our efforts. And future victories will also depend on the organization of working people fighting for our interests.

This is also why we need an alternative to the two parties representing business. Despite the Democratic Party posing as a progressive alternative to the Republicans - we can see here in Seattle how it was only with the election of a socialist that the establishment was forced to pass real gains for workers. We need many more independent and socialist candidates to turn the tide against corporate politics.

Our victory is not complete, but we have fought until the last day, the last hour, against all the loopholes demanded by business. I thank those councilmembers who voted for my pro-worker amendments.

We'll come back to the questions of tip penalty, the long-phase in, the training wage.

What was lost through corporate loopholes is a reminder to us that outcomes are determined by the balance of forces. It is a reminder that we need to continue to build an even more powerful movement. A movement strong enough to overcome the counterattacks from business. A movement that goes on from 15 to win further gains to address the stunning income inequality workers face - a movement that will fight for rent control, taxes on millionaires & big developers, and full funding for all public services.

I appeal to all workers to join the movement. The attempts of business to undermine 15 will continue, well after this vote today. They may submit legal challenges, they may challenge at the ballot, they may wait for their moment to make the "temporary" tip penalty permanent.

But today's message is clear: If we organize as workers, with a socialist strategy, we can tackle the chasm of income inequality and social injustice.

15 in Seattle is just a beginning. We have an entire world to win.

Solidarity.

[View in Council Newsroom]

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Call for Films

Are you a filmmaker? Submit your work to Northwest Film Forum for screening in their Local Sightings program by June 30th and their Children's Film Festival Seattle by October 1st.

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Action Summary, Monday, June 2, 2014

Action Summary of the Seattle City Council Full Council Meeting Monday, June 2, 2014  (No absences)   SELECT COMMITTEE ON MINIMUM WAGE AND INCOME INEQUALITY: 1. C.B. 118098  PASSED (9-0) Relating to employment in Seattle; adding a new Chapter 14.19 to the Seattle Municipal Code; establishing minimum wage and minimum compensation rates for employees performing work...

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Three for the Road Ahead

I had a special assignment Thursday. Sen. Patty Murray was holding her annual “Golden Tennis Shoe Awards” luncheon, honoring unsung local heroes. My mission, besides hearing from Sens. Murray and Elizabeth Warren, was to get a copy of Seattle’s “No Wage Gap” campaign button into Sen. Murray’s hands.

It was the least I could do, since Sen. Murray has long been our hero working for wage equity for women and trying against all odds to pass a Paycheck Fairness Act.

What we – 1700 luncheon guests — were treated to at the “GoldenTennis Shoe” awards was Sen. Murray introducing us to three remarkable honorees, folks that you otherwise might not have heard about. First off there was Fitsum Abraha, who came to Seattle, age 10 from Sudan, speaking no English. He grew … Continue Reading »